If the focus was not on worrying about how many Kwh you need to power your critical loads but instead the smallest battery string that wouldn't be fried by lots of power coursing through it on the way to the loads or the grid, how would one determine that?
Specifically I will have 13kw array feeding through Outback 8048A and 4048A which then goes to battery charging/loads/sell to grid.
I don't quite grasp how the flow of electricity works. Let's say I have a nice sunny day and 12kw being produced. The Outbacks are maxxed. The battery string is charged. Does any electricity even pass through the battery at that point? Or do the Outbacks sense resistance in them and say" nope, those guys don't need power lets send it to the loads and grid"?
If this is the case could, in an extreme example, you have one lonely battery?
thanks in advance.
Specifically I will have 13kw array feeding through Outback 8048A and 4048A which then goes to battery charging/loads/sell to grid.
I don't quite grasp how the flow of electricity works. Let's say I have a nice sunny day and 12kw being produced. The Outbacks are maxxed. The battery string is charged. Does any electricity even pass through the battery at that point? Or do the Outbacks sense resistance in them and say" nope, those guys don't need power lets send it to the loads and grid"?
If this is the case could, in an extreme example, you have one lonely battery?
thanks in advance.
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